CEDA
Spanish Confederation of Autonomous Rights Confederación Española de Derechas Autónomas | |
|---|---|
| Leader | José María Gil-Robles y Quiñones |
| Founded | 4 March 1933 |
| Dissolved | 19 April 1937 |
| Merger of | |
| Preceded by | Popular Action |
| Headquarters | Madrid, Spain |
| Newspaper | El Debate |
| Youth wing | Juventudes de Acción Popular |
| Membership (1933) | 700,000 (party's claim) |
| Ideology | Corporatism Political Catholicism |
| Political position | Right-wing |
| Religion | Roman Catholicism |
| Colors | Blue |
| Congress of Deputies (1936) | 88 / 473 |
| Party flag | |
^ A: Also described as centre-right and far-right. | |
| Part of a series on |
| Conservatism in Spain |
|---|
The Confederación Española de Derechas Autónomas (lit. 'Spanish Confederation of Autonomous Rights'; sometimes translated as Spanish Confederation of Autonomous Right-wing Groups; CEDA) was a short-lived, right-wing political party in the Second Spanish Republic. A Catholic force, it was the political heir to Ángel Herrera Oria's Acción Popular. Their political goal was replacing liberal democracy by a corporatist order. As such, they advocated for an authoritarian and corporatist State shaped after the Church's social doctrine.
The CEDA won a plurality in the 1933 legislative election, and then provided parliamentary support to Radical governments. The party represented the interests of the Catholic voters as well as the rural population of Spain, most prominently the medium and small peasants and landowners. The party sought the restoration of the powerful role of the Catholic Church that existed in Spain before the establishment of the Republic, and based their program solely on Catholic teaching, calling for land redistribution and industrial reform based on the distributist and corporatist ideals of Rerum Novarum and Quadragesimo Anno.